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Homans was impressed by Henderson's notion of a conceptual scheme. A conceptual scheme consists of a classification of variables (or concepts) that need to be taken into account when studying a set of phenomena.<ref name="Treviño, A. Javier 2009"/> It also consists of a sketch of the given conditions within which the phenomena are to be analyzed. It also must contain a statement that the variables are related to one another—and following Pareto, that relationship is usually seen as one of mutual dependence.<ref name="Treviño, A. Javier 2009"/>
Homans was impressed by Henderson's notion of a conceptual scheme. A conceptual scheme consists of a classification of variables (or concepts) that need to be taken into account when studying a set of phenomena.<ref name="Treviño, A. Javier 2009"/> It also consists of a sketch of the given conditions within which the phenomena are to be analyzed. It also must contain a statement that the variables are related to one another—and following Pareto, that relationship is usually seen as one of mutual dependence.<ref name="Treviño, A. Javier 2009"/>


Homans was very interested in Henderson's conceptual scheme as a way of classifying phenomena and applied it to his own study of small groups. Henderson's teachings were included in Homans' work ''The Human Group'' (1950). This book's ultimate goal was to move from a study of the social system as it is exemplified in single groups toward a study of the system as it is exemplified in many groups, including groups changing in time.<ref name="Treviño, A. Javier 2009"/> The work has a theme of, "the way group norms develop and the ways a group, consciously or unconsciously, seeks to maintain the cohesion of the group when members depart from group norms."<ref name=":1" /> Homans establishes that, "the general propositions would have to meet only one condition: in accordance with my original insight, they should apply to individual human beings as members of a species."<ref name=":3" />
Homans was very interested in Henderson's conceptual scheme as a way of classifying phenomena and applied it to his own study of small groups. Henderson's teachings were included in Homans' work ''The Human Group'' (1950). This book's ultimate goal was to move from a study of the social system as it is exemplified in single groups toward a study of the system as it is exemplified in many groups, including groups changing in time.<ref name="Treviño, A. Javier 2009"/> The work has a theme of, "the way group norms develop and the ways a group, consciously or unconsciously, seeks to maintain the cohesion of the group when members depart from group norms."<ref name=":1" /> Homans establishes that, "the general propositions would have to meet only one condition: in accordance with my original insight, they should apply to individual human beings as members of a species."<ref name=":3" /> According to Homans the sociologists goal was to “move from a study of the social system as it is exemplified in single groups toward a study of the system as it is exemplified in many groups, including groups changing in time” (Homans 1949: 336). By the late 1950s Homans came slowly to the conclusion that human social systems were much less organic than what he had previously believed.


Homans said, "If we wanted to establish the reality of a social system as a complex of mutually dependent elements, why not begin by studying a system small enough so that we could, so to speak, see all the way around it, small enough so that all the relevant observations could be made in detail and at first hand?" He fulfilled this study throughout ''The Human Group''. This book allowed him to make certain generalizations, including the idea that the more frequently people interact with one another, when no one individually initiates interactions more than others, the greater is their liking for one another and their feeling of ease in one another's presence. Although this wasn't Homans' greatest piece of work, it allowed him to become more familiar with this type of methodology and led him to explain elementary social behavior.
Homans said, "If we wanted to establish the reality of a social system as a complex of mutually dependent elements, why not begin by studying a system small enough so that we could, so to speak, see all the way around it, small enough so that all the relevant observations could be made in detail and at first hand?" He fulfilled this study throughout ''The Human Group''. This book allowed him to make certain generalizations, including the idea that the more frequently people interact with one another, when no one individually initiates interactions more than others, the greater is their liking for one another and their feeling of ease in one another's presence. Although this wasn't Homans' greatest piece of work, it allowed him to become more familiar with this type of methodology and led him to explain elementary social behavior.

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'{{Infobox scientist |name = George Caspar Homans |image = George C Homans 1946.jpg |caption = Associate Professor of Sociology at Harvard in 1946 |birth_date = {{Birth date|1910|8|11|mf=y}} |birth_place = [[Boston]], [[Massachusetts]] |death_date = {{death date and age|1989|5|29|1910|8|11|mf=y}} |death_place = [[Cambridge, Massachusetts]] |citizenship = United States |nationality = |fields =English, Psychology, Philosophy, Sociology, Social behavior |workplaces = |alma_mater = [[Harvard University]], [[Cambridge University]] (Masters) |doctoral_advisor = |academic_advisors = |doctoral_students = |notable_students = |known_for = ''The Human Group'', ''Social Behavior: Its Elementary Forms'', Exchange Theory |author_abbrev_bot = |author_abbrev_zoo = |influences = [[Robert K. Merton]], [[Talcott Parsons]], [[Lawrence J. Henderson]], [[Vilfredo Pareto]], [[B.F. Skinner]], [[Bernard DeVoto]], [[Émile Durkheim]], [[Elton Mayo]] |influenced = [[Charles Tilly]], Richard M. Emerson, [[Peter Blau]], [[James Samuel Coleman]], [[Edward Laumann]], Linda D. Molm, Karen S. Cook, Edward J. Lawler |awards = |signature = |footnotes = |ethnicity = |religion = }} '''George Caspar Homans''' (August 11, 1910 – May 29, 1989) was an American sociologist, founder of [[behavioral sociology]] and a major contributor to the [[social exchange theory]]. Homans is best known for his research in social behavior and his works: ''The Human Group'', ''Social Behavior: Its Elementary Forms'', his Exchange Theory and the many different propositions he made to better explain social behavior. == Biography == George C. Homans was a humanist and sociologist, some might say the last of a generation. Born in [[Boston]] on August 11, 1910, he grew up in a little house in Francis Avenue, Cambridge Massachusetts, son of Robert Homans and Abigail Adams-Homans (one can get complete sense of George C. Homans' upbringing by reading her biography ''Education by Uncles).'' Although he was one of sociology's greatest minds he had no graduate degrees in sociology or any other subject for that matter. Moreover, he was never properly trained because he believed that training was exclusively for dogs. Nevertheless, he educated himself by reading and listening to his peers and by conducting extensive "field work" in observing various social groups and became the president of the ''[[American Sociological Association]].'' He was the great-great grandson of [[John Quincy Adams]], the sixth President of the United States, and great-great-great grandson of [[John Adams]], the second President of the United States. At George's birth, his mother wrote to her Uncle Henry: 'His head is a mass of lumps which will make him look very distinguished when, as a bald old gentleman, he sits upon the bench dispensing justice.'"<ref name=":1">{{Cite journal|last=Bell|first=Daniel|author-link=Daniel Bell|year=1992|title=George C. Homans (11 August 1910-29 May 1989)|journal=[[Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society]]|publisher=[[American Philosophical Society]]|jstor=986764|volume=136|issue=4|pages=586–593|url= https://www.jstor.org/stable/986764}}</ref> George did not talk about the Adamses, yet had distinctively visible features in his skull that came from the Adamses. The Homanses, his father's family represented a different skein of public and service, the tradition of professions. For generations the family focused on two professions, Medical practice and Law. The Homans' came from a lineage of distinguished doctors that began when the first John Homans came to the country from Ramsgate, Kent, England in the 18th century. His son, Dr. John Homans, a Harvard University graduate, was the first to become a doctor and begin the reputation of the John Homanses (Homans 1984:1–2). "George's father was a lawyer, but George was the first member of the family to eschew the law".<ref name=":1" /> == Personal life == Homans attended [[St. Paul's School (New Hampshire)|St. Paul's School]] in [[Concord, New Hampshire]], from 1923 to 1928.<ref>[https://archive.today/wip/E6LOd "George Casper Homans."] ''Your Dictionary''. Archived from [https://biography.yourdictionary.com/george-caspar-homans the original.]</ref><ref>[http://www.sps70.org/AlumniHorae/15thAH.pdf "Corrections."] ''Alumni Horae'' ([[St. Paul's School (New Hampshire)|St. Paul’s School]]), vol. 65, no. 2 (1985): 94.</ref> From his [[autobiography]] (Homans 1984), it is learned that Homans entered [[Harvard College]] in 1928 with a concentration in [[English Literature|English]] and [[American literature]]. During his undergraduate years pursued poetry and had developed a grand ambition to become a writer and poet. George published his original works in ''[[The Harvard Advocate]],'' in which he was elected into the editorial board''.'' After graduating in 1932, Homans wanted to pursue a career as a newspaperman with a "job beginning in the fall with William Allen White of the Emporia, Kansas,''Gazette''," but because of the Depression the newspaper could no longer offer him the job, leaving Homans unemployed (Homans 1962:3). "In 1941, he married Nancy Parshall Cooper who remained his lifelong compatible partner".<ref name=":1" /> Homans served in the Naval Reserve (1941) he always had a love for the sea, as an undergraduate he assisted on helping Samuel Eliot Morrison in writing ''Massachusetts on the sea,'' so much so that Morrison named Homans co-author. George served four and a half years on active duty, serving five years in the navy in total, more than two were spent in command of several small ships engaged in anti submarine warfare and the escort of convoy operations (Homans 1962:50). Although he served for the duration of the war, in his autobiography ''Coming to my Senses: The Education of Sociologist'' (1984)'','' he later expressed his "impatience with the constraints of the naval hierarchy and his disdain for staff desk officers, especially those in bureaucratic branches such as the Supply Corps".<ref name=":1" /> == Education and Becoming a Sociologist == While Homans was at Harvard College, where he spent most of his time along the banks of Charles, in Harvard George met the person that directly influenced his life. Bernard ("Benny") de Voto, "a crusty man, cantankerous in his literary feuds whose name has been largely forgotten" was a part-time member of the Harvard Faculty and tutored Homans in English. "George ... was attracted to de Voto's stories about the plains and the prairies, but more, to the actuality of the lives of people and the American character as expressed in midwestern writing. In many ways, too, "George adopted the mannerisms of de Voto, the outwardly boisterous tones (but not for either the boosterist mentality) and the scorn of intellectualist rhetoric".<ref name=":1" /> Outwardly jaunty and self-assured, yet discreetly battling his own demons within his closed heart. He reserved all his pain and suffering for his poetry, which is seen in his book of poetry ''The Witch Hazel'' (1988). Homans became interested in sociology by living in an environment where people are highly conscious of social relations. Homans describes his entrance to sociology as "a matter of chance; or rather, I got into sociology because I had nothing better to do" (Homans 1962:3). [[Lawrence Joseph Henderson]], a biochemist and sociologist who believed that all sciences should be based on a unified set of theoretical and methodological principles, was an important influencer on Homans' perspective. Homans, with no job and nothing to do, attended Henderson's seminar at Harvard one day and was immediately taken by his lecture. Homans was also influenced by Professor Elton Mayo, where he was assigned to readings by prominent social anthropologists. From these readings, Homans developed his belief that instead of similarities in cultures, "members of the human species working in similar circumstances had independently created the similar institutions."<ref name=":3" /> As a result, Homans joined a discussion group at Harvard called the Pareto Circle, which was led by Henderson and inspired by the work of [[Vilfredo Pareto]]. Henderson often discussed Vilfredo Pareto in his lectures. Pareto was a sociologist concerned with economic distribution. Pareto's theories and Henderson's lectures influenced Homans' first book, ''An Introduction to Pareto'',<ref>Homans, George Caspar, and Charles P. Curtis, Jr. 1934. ''An Introduction to Pareto, His Sociology''. New York: Knopf.</ref> co-authored with fellow Circle member Charles P. Curtis. From 1934 to 1939 Homans was selected to become a part of the [[Harvard Society of Fellows|Society of Fellows]] a newly formed institution founded by A. Lawrence Lowell at Harvard, undertaking a variety of studies in various areas, including sociology, [[psychology]], and history. His comrades in the institution included, [[Willard Van Orman Quine|Van Quine]], [[Andrew M. Gleason|Andrew Gleason]] and [[B. F. Skinner|B.F. Skinner]] most of whom went on to become Harvard professors. In the institution the companions educated each other, George learned the most from his companion B.F. Skinner. Skinner taught Homans about the method of meticulous observation and the idea of reinforcement. "One can say that, in nunc, George Homans's sociology was a blend of Skinnerian reinforcement with utility theory." For his Junior Fellowship project Homans undertook an anthropological study of rural England, later published as ''English Villagers of the Thirteenth Century'' (1941) which he wrote instead of a Ph.D. that he never received. (see Homans 1984: 167). Homans was taken into the [[Graduate school|graduate program]] at Harvard; Pitirim Sorokin, founder of Harvard's sociology department in 1930, was credited with bringing Homans and Robert Merton into the program.<ref>Sica, Alan (2005). ''Social Thought From the Enlightenment to the Present'', Pennsylvania State University, 514.</ref> From this knowledge gained, "the key idea that Homans took away from these studies was the centrality of interaction and the way sentiments developed between individuals as a consequence on interaction."<ref name=":1" /> == Teaching == In 1939 Homans became a Harvard [[faculty (teaching staff)|faculty]] member, a lifelong affiliation in which he taught both sociology and [[medieval history]] "as well as studied poetry and small groups."<ref>Tilly, Charles (1990). "George Caspar Homans and the Rest of Us", Springer, 261–268.</ref> This teaching brought him in contact with new works in [[industrial sociology]] and exposed him to works of functional anthropologists. He was an instructor of sociology until 1941 when he left to serve in the [[United States Navy|U.S. Navy]] to support the war effort. After four years away, he came back to Boston and continued his teaching as an associate professor from 1946 to 1953, and a full professor of sociology after 1953. He was a [[Ford Foundation]] Fellow at Harvard's Graduate School of Business Administration.<ref name="George Homans 1989"/> He was also a visiting professor at the [[University of Manchester]] in 1953, at [[Cambridge University]] from 1955 to 1956, and at the [[University of Kent]] in 1967.<ref name="Treviño, A. Javier 2009">Treviño, A. Javier (2009).</ref> By virtue of his theoretical writings (discussed below), he was elected 54th president of the [[American Sociological Association]] in 1964. He retired from teaching in 1980.<ref name="George Homans 1989">[https://archive.today/ds4eU "George Homans, 78, Sociologist and Harvard Professor Emeritus"] ([[obituary]]). ''[[New York Times]]'' (May 30, 1989): sec. A, p. 20.</ref> ==Theoretical Agenda and General Argument== As a theorist, Homans' overall intellectual ambition was to create a more unified social science on a firm theoretical basis. His approach to theory developed in two phases, usually interpreted by commentators as [[inductive reasoning|inductive]] and [[Deductive reasoning|deductive]]. Although this is a bit of an oversimplification, it provides a framework for outlining his theoretical contributions. In its mature (1974) form, Homans' theory rests upon two metatheoretical claims: (1) the basic principles of social science must be true of individuals as members of the human species, not as members of particular groups or cultures; and (2) any other generalizations or facts about human social life will be derivable from these principles (and suitable initial conditions). He argued that large-scale structures can be understood if we understand elementary social behavior.<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> Another way to grasp his argument is to interpret it as striving to explain spontaneous social order, a point developed in detail by Fararo (2001). Homans' approach is an example of [[methodological individualism]] in social science, also favored by some more recent influential social theorists, particularly those who have adopted some form of rational choice theory (e.g., [[James Samuel Coleman|James S. Coleman]]) that enables greater deductive fertility in theorizing—albeit often with a cost in terms of some loss of [[wikt:realism|realism]]. ==''The Human Group''== Homans was impressed by Henderson's notion of a conceptual scheme. A conceptual scheme consists of a classification of variables (or concepts) that need to be taken into account when studying a set of phenomena.<ref name="Treviño, A. Javier 2009"/> It also consists of a sketch of the given conditions within which the phenomena are to be analyzed. It also must contain a statement that the variables are related to one another—and following Pareto, that relationship is usually seen as one of mutual dependence.<ref name="Treviño, A. Javier 2009"/> Homans was very interested in Henderson's conceptual scheme as a way of classifying phenomena and applied it to his own study of small groups. Henderson's teachings were included in Homans' work ''The Human Group'' (1950). This book's ultimate goal was to move from a study of the social system as it is exemplified in single groups toward a study of the system as it is exemplified in many groups, including groups changing in time.<ref name="Treviño, A. Javier 2009"/> The work has a theme of, "the way group norms develop and the ways a group, consciously or unconsciously, seeks to maintain the cohesion of the group when members depart from group norms."<ref name=":1" /> Homans establishes that, "the general propositions would have to meet only one condition: in accordance with my original insight, they should apply to individual human beings as members of a species."<ref name=":3" /> Homans said, "If we wanted to establish the reality of a social system as a complex of mutually dependent elements, why not begin by studying a system small enough so that we could, so to speak, see all the way around it, small enough so that all the relevant observations could be made in detail and at first hand?" He fulfilled this study throughout ''The Human Group''. This book allowed him to make certain generalizations, including the idea that the more frequently people interact with one another, when no one individually initiates interactions more than others, the greater is their liking for one another and their feeling of ease in one another's presence. Although this wasn't Homans' greatest piece of work, it allowed him to become more familiar with this type of methodology and led him to explain elementary social behavior. In this work, Homans also proposes that social reality should be described at three levels: [[social event]]s, [[Norm (social)|customs]], and analytical [[hypothesis|hypotheses]] that describe the processes by which customs arise and are maintained or changed. Hypotheses are formulated in terms of relationships among variables such as frequency of interaction, similarity of activities, intensity of sentiment, and conformity to norms. Using notable sociological and [[anthropology|anthropological]] field studies as the grounding for such general ideas, the book makes a persuasive case for [[treating group]]s as social systems that can be analyzed in terms of a verbal [[analog (English)|analogue]] of the [[mathematical method]] of studying equilibrium and [[stability theory|stability]] of systems. In his theoretical analyses of these groups, he begins to use ideas that later loomed large in his work, e.g., reinforcement and exchange. Along the way, he treats important general [[phenomenon|phenomena]] such as [[social control]], [[authority]], [[Reciprocity (cultural anthropology)|reciprocity]], and [[ritual]]. ==The Exchange Theory== The Exchange Theory is the "perspective that individuals seek to maximize their own private gratifications. It assumes that these rewards can only be found in social interactions and thus people seek rewards in their interactions with each other".<ref>{{Cite book|title=Dictionary of Sociology: The Penguin Reference|last=Abercrombie|first=Nicholas|last2=Hill|first2=Stephen|last3=Turner|first3=Bryan|publisher=The Penguin Group|year=2006|isbn=978-0-14-101375-6|location=New York|pages=[https://archive.org/details/penguindictionar00aber_1/page/139 139–140]|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/penguindictionar00aber_1/page/139}}</ref> Homans' Exchange Theory propositions are partially based on B.F. Skinner's behaviorism. Homans took B.F. Skinner's propositions about pigeon behavior and applied it to human interactions.<ref name="George Ritzer 2008" /> The heart of Homans' Exchange Theory lies in propositions based on economic and psychological principles. According to Homans, they are psychological for two reasons: first, because they are usually tested on people who call themselves psychologists and second, because of the level at which they deal with the individual in society. He believed that a sociology built on his principles would be able to explain all social behavior. Homans said, "An incidental advantage of an exchange theory is that it might bring sociology closer to economics" (Homans 1958:598). Overall, Homans' exchange theory, "can be condensed to a view of the actor as a rational profit seeker."<ref name=":3">{{Cite book|title=Sociological Theory|last=Ritzer|first=George|publisher=McGraw-Hill|year=2014|isbn=978-0-07-802701-7|location=New York|pages=404–405, 412}}</ref> He regretted that his theory was labeled "Exchange Theory" because he saw this theory of social behavior as a behavioral psychology applied to specific situations.<ref name="George Ritzer 2008">George Ritzer (2008).</ref> Homans looked to Émile Durkheim's work for guidance as well, but often disagreed in the end with particular components of Durkheim's theories. For example, Durkheim believed that although individuals are the parts of society, society is more than the individuals who constitute it.<ref name="James Farganis 2008">James Farganis (2008)</ref> He believed that society could be studied without reducing it to individuals and their motivations.<ref name="James Farganis 2008"/> Homans, through his Exchange Theory, believed that individual beings and behavior are relevant to understanding society. ==Albert Chavannes and the Exchange Theory== Although George Homans contributed greatly to the Exchange Theory and his work on it is greatly admired, he was not the first person to study this theory. "From 1883 to 1885 Albert Chavannes published in ''The Sociologist'' a series of papers titled 'Studies in Sociology' which treated 'The Law of Exchange' and three other social laws."<ref>Knox, John B. (1963). "The Concept of Exchange in Sociological Theory: 1884 and 1961", ''Social Forces'', Oxford University Press, 341–346.</ref> Chavannes' work on the theory was similar to what Homans did. However, he focused more on empirical sociology, and he did not contribute to it in the same way as Homans (Knox 1963: 341). Although Homans may have not have been the first to work on this theory, his contributions make the Exchange Theory what it is today. ==''Social Behavior''== <!-- someone with access to the books needs to check the quotes below --> Homans's next major work was ''Social Behavior: Its Elementary Forms''. He wrote this book in 1961 and revised it in 1974. This was based on the principles of behavioral psychology, and helped explain the "sub-institutional," or elementary, forms of social behavior in small groups.<ref name="Treviño, A. Javier 2009"/> This explanation of social behavior first appeared in an article Homans published titled "Social Behavior as Exchange" in 1958. He believed his Exchange Theory was derived from both behavioral psychology and elementary economics.<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> Homans had come to the view that theory should be expressed as a [[deductive system]] (deductive reasoning, a researcher tests a theory by collecting and examining empirical evidence to see if the theory is true.), in this respect falling under the influence of the logical empiricist philosophers of that period. Substantively, he argued that a satisfactory explanation in the social sciences is based upon "propositions"—principles—about individual behavior that are drawn from the behavioral psychology of the time. Homans didn't believe that new propositions are needed to explain social behavior. The laws of individual behavior developed by Skinner in his study of pigeons explain social behavior as long as we take into account the complications of mutual reinforcement.<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> "Social Behavior is an exchange of goods, material goods, but also non-material ones, such as the symbols of approval or prestige. Persons that give much to others try to get much from them, and persons that get much from others are under pressure to give much to them." (Homans 1958:606). Social behavior as exchange means that a plurality of individuals, each postulated to behave according to the stated behavioral principles, form a system of interaction. [[Social approval]] is the basic reward that people can give to one another. In much greater detail, he developed this approach in his book ''Social Behavior: Its Elementary Forms'' (1961, revised 1974). Homans gives an example of this type of social behavior below: "Suppose that two men are doing paperwork jobs in an office. According to the office rules, each should do his job by himself, or, if he needs help, he should consult the supervisor. One of the men, whom we shall call Person, is not skillful at the work and would get it done better and faster if he got help from time to time. Despite the rules he is reluctant to go to the supervisor, for to confess his incompetence might hurt his chances for promotion. Instead he seeks out the other man, whom we shall call Other for short, and asks him for help. Other is more experienced at the work than is Person; he can do his work well and quickly and be left with time to spare, and he has reason to suppose that the supervisor will not go out of his way to look for a breach of rules. Other gives Person help and in return Person gives Other thanks and expressions of approval. The two men have exchanged help and approval." (Homans, 1961:31–32)<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> Focusing on this situation, and basing his ideas on Skinner's findings, Homans developed several propositions. ==The Success Proposition== "For all actions taken by persons, the more often a particular action of a person is rewarded, the more likely the person is to perform that action." (Homans, 1974:16)<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> In terms of his "Person-Other" example, this proposition means that a person is more likely to ask others for advice if past advice has been useful. Also, the more often a person received useful advice in the past, the more often they will request more advice and be willing to give advice. The success proposition involves three stages: (1) a person's action, (2) a rewarded result, and (3) a repetition of the original action.<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> ==The Stimulus Proposition== "If in the past the occurrence of a particular stimulus, or set of stimuli, has been the occasion on which a person's action has been rewarded, then the more similar the present stimuli are to the past ones, the more likely the person is to perform the action, or some similar action." (Homans, 1974:23)<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> One may look at Homans' example: If in the past, the Person and Other found the giving and getting of advice rewarding, they are likely to engage in similar actions and in similar situations in the future. Homans' example: "A fisherman who has cast his line into a dark pool and has caught a fish becomes more apt to fish in dark pools again" (1974:23). Homans was interested in the process of generalization, or the tendency to extend behavior to similar circumstances;<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> but he was also concerned with the process of discrimination. For example, Person and Other may only give useful advice in the same room as in the past because they think that particular situation brought the most success. ==The Value Proposition== "The more valuable to a person is the result of his action, the more likely he is to perform the action." (Homans, 1974:25)<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> If the rewards each offers to the other are considered valuable, the actors are more likely to perform the desired behaviors than they are if the rewards are not valuable. Homans introduced the concepts of rewards and punishments. Rewards are actions with positive values and punishments are actions with negative values. Rewards can either be materialistic (money) or altruistic (helping others) He found punishment to be an inefficient means of getting people to change their behavior, because people may react in undesirable ways to punishment.<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> ==The Deprivation-Satiation Proposition== "The more often in the recent past a person has received a particular reward, the less valuable any further unit of that reward becomes for him." (Homans, 1974:29)<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> In the office, Person and Other may reward each other so often for giving and getting advice that the rewards cease to be valuable to them. Time is important—people are less likely to become satiated if particular rewards are stretched over a long period of time. Homans then defined cost and profit. Cost of any behavior is defined as the rewards lost in forgoing alternative lines of action. Profit in [[Social exchange theory|social exchange]] is seen as the greater number of rewards gained over costs incurred.<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> ==The Aggression-Approval Propositions== "Proposition A: When a person's action does not receive the rewards as expected, or receives punishment he did not expect, he will be angry. He becomes more likely to perform aggressive {{sic|havior}}, and the results of such behavior become more valuable to him." (Homans, 1974:37) If Person does not get the advice they expected and Other does not receive the praise they anticipated, both are likely to be angry. "Proposition B: When a person's action receives the reward they expected, especially a greater reward than they expected, or does not receive punishment he expected, he will be pleased. He becomes more likely to perform approving behavior, and the results of such behavior become more valuable to him." (Homans, 1974:39) When Person gets the advice they expect, and Other gets the praise they expect, both are more likely to get or give advice. Proposition A on aggression-approval refers to negative emotions, whereas Proposition B deals with positive emotions.<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> ==The Rationality Proposition== "In choosing between alternative actions, a person will choose that one for which, as perceived by him at the time, the value, V, of the result, multiplied by the probability, p, of getting the result, is the greater." (Homans, 1974:43) When earlier propositions rely on behaviorism, the rationality proposition demonstrates the influence of rational choice theory on Homans' approach. In economic terms, actors who act in accord with the rationality proposition are maximizing their utilities.<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> People examine and make calculations about alternative actions open to them. They compare the amount of rewards associated with each course of action and calculate the likelihood that they will receive the rewards.<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> In other words, there is a relationship between the value of the reward and the likelihood of the attainment. The rationality proposition tells us that people will perform an action depending on their perception of the probability of success.<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> Durkheim agreed with Homans' understanding of rationality. He believed that rationalism is an aspect of individualism.<ref name="Robert Bellah 1973">Robert Bellah (1973).</ref> Durkheim said that all development of individualism has the effect of opening moral consciousness to new ideas and rendering it more demanding.<ref name="Robert Bellah 1973"/> Homans worked off of Durkheim's thoughts throughout the development of certain propositions. ==Legacy== He died of a heart ailment on May 29, 1989, in Cambridge, Massachusetts; at his death, he left behind his wife, Nancy, and three children as well as four grandchildren.<ref name="George Homans 1989" /> George C. Homans left to the sociological world many works on social theory, and is best known for his Exchange Theory and his works on social behavior. The impact he had on his students and colleagues and people he came in contact with is described by [[Charles Tilly]] in "George Caspar Homans and the Rest of Us": "His students inherited distrust of theory for its own sake and theories about theories. Even when they disagreed, his students and readers came away stimulated and refreshed. George was a vivifier, a life-giver" (Tilly, 1990:264). Also, Homans' election as the 54th president of the American Sociological Association (ASA) in 1964 allowed him to have a greater impact on sociology. In his Presidential address, entitled "Bringing Men Back In", was delivered at the ASA Annual Meeting in Montreal, September 2, 1964. This was later published in the December 1964 issue of the ''American Sociological Review.'' As Tilly also noted: "His differences made a difference to us, his colleagues, his friends, and successors. George was not, it is true, above rejoicing in his own talents, and thereby shaming or intimidating those about him" (Tilly, 1990:266). == Quotes by Homans == "''Sociology is the profession of studying and teaching about what happens when at least two persons are in a position to influence one another''" (Homans, 1962:103) "''Given the chance, I have always deserted anything that might have contemporary practical importance or that might lead to reforms. I have deserted the twentieth century for the thirteenth, social pathology for primitive kinship, industrial sociology for the study of small groups. It may have been mere escapism... My nerves may have been too weak for the modern world. What never failed to interest me was not sociology as an agent of change or as a means of understanding my immediate environment but sociology as a generalizing science. What were the best possibilities for establishing generalizations? What were the main intellectual issues? By what handle shall we lay hold on it? "''<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|year=1975|title=Conversation...with George C. Homans.|journal=Organizational Dynamics.|volume=4|issue=2}}</ref> "''As far as what good my work does people, I’m sorry to say that it does much more by way of alerting people to what may go wrong than it does in telling them what they can do about it.''"<ref name=":0" /> "''When you’re talking about reforming an industrial system, you have to talk about something that can be operated across the board. With much attention, very skilled people, small groups, reform always can be successful in some sense. But then people jump from this to something that’s going to operate across the board and reform the whole industrial system. They forget the Homans principle that no society, no governmental system, or no industrial system can work successfully if it depends on extraordinary abilities on the part of the people who run it. It has to be operable by ordinary damn fools like me.''"<ref name=":0" /> "''In human terms, it is hopeless. All of us believe in determinism at times—that is, experimentally believe in it. At other times, we believe we’re free. Our behavior is completely, but it doesn’t make damn bit of difference to me because I can’t predict it. I can’t show how the behavior of different men, behavior of exemplifying the same general propositions, combines over time to produce particular results. The trouble is that the past behavior that affects—determines if you will—present behavior is linked together in complex chains, creating the illusion of freedom.''"<ref name=":0" /> ''“It is really intolerable that we can say only one thing at a time; for social behavior displays many features at the same time, and so in taking them up one by one we necessarily do outrage to its rich, dark, organic unity.” (Homans, 1961)'' ''“The rule of distributive justice is a statement of what ought to be, and what people say ought to be is determined in the long run and with some lag by what they find in fact to be the case”. (Homans, 1974)'' ==Selected works== '''Articles''' * "The Small Warship." ''[[American Sociological Review]]'', vol. 11, no. 3 (1946): 294–300. {{doi|10.2307/2087113}}. {{JSTOR|2087113}}. * "Social Behavior as Exchange." ''[[American Journal of Sociology]]'', vol. 63, no. 6 (May 1958): 597–606. {{doi|10.1086/222355}}. {{JSTOR|2772990}}. '''Books''' * ''English Villagers of the Thirteenth Century '' (1941) * ''The Human Group'' (1950) * ''Social Behavior: Its Elementary Forms'' (1961) [rev. ed. 1974] * [[iarchive:natureofsocialsc00homa|''The Nature of Social Science'']] (1967) ::"The three chapters of this book were delivered, in earlier versions, as Walker-Ames Lectures at the University of Washington in the summer of 1965." * ''Coming to My Senses: The Autobiography of a Sociologist'' (1984) * ''Certainties and Doubts'' (1987) * ''Sentiments & Activities: Essays in Social Science'' (1962) ==Related Works or Commentaries== *Fararo, Thomas J. (2001). ''Social Action Systems: Foundation and Synthesis in Sociological Theory.'' Greenwich, CT: Praeger. *Turner, Jonathan H. (1998). "George C. Homans' Behavioristic Approach." Ch. 20. ''The Structure of Sociological Theory.'' 6th ed. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth. *Treviño, A. Javier. (2009). [http://www.infed.org/thinkers/george_homans.htm "George C. Homans, the human group and elementary social behaviour"], ''The Encyclopaedia of Informal Education''. *Treviño, A. Javier. (2006) ''George C. Homans: History, Theory, and Method''. Boulder, CO: Paradigm. * Ritzer, George. (2008) ''Sociological Theory.'' Ch. 12. "The Exchange Theory of George Homans" New York: [[McGraw-Hill]]. *Farganis, James. (2008). ''Readings in Social Theory: The Classic Tradition to Post-Modernism'' Chp. 2. "Emile Durkheim: Anomie and Social Integration." New York: [[McGraw-Hill]]. *Bellah, Robert N.(1973) "Emile Durkheim on Morality and Society." Introduction. [[University of Chicago Press]]. *Bloksberg, Leonard M., and David G. French, Melvin B. Mogulof, Walter F. Stern (1964).[http://www.bjpa.org/Publications/details.cfm?PublicationID=5390 "Homans' Theory of the Human Group: Applications to Problems of Administration, Policy, and Staff Training in Group Service Agencies."] ''Journal of Jewish Communal Service'', 379–395. National Conference of Jewish Communal Service. ==References== {{Reflist}} ==External links== {{Wikiquote}} * [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bXjU60a8dmI "Two Boston Brahmins"] (Summer 1985). The extended recording of Homans with Tom Adams in discussion for the sociological documentary ''[[American Tongues]]''. * {{Find a Grave}} {{American Sociological Association presidents|state=uncollapsed}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Homans, George C.}} [[Category:1910 births]] [[Category:1989 deaths]] [[Category:Harvard College alumni]] [[Category:American sociologists]] [[Category:Presidents of the American Sociological Association]] [[Category:Adams political family]] [[Category:Crowninshield family]]'
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'{{Infobox scientist |name = George Caspar Homans |image = George C Homans 1946.jpg |caption = Associate Professor of Sociology at Harvard in 1946 |birth_date = {{Birth date|1910|8|11|mf=y}} |birth_place = [[Boston]], [[Massachusetts]] |death_date = {{death date and age|1989|5|29|1910|8|11|mf=y}} |death_place = [[Cambridge, Massachusetts]] |citizenship = United States |nationality = |fields =English, Psychology, Philosophy, Sociology, Social behavior |workplaces = |alma_mater = [[Harvard University]], [[Cambridge University]] (Masters) |doctoral_advisor = |academic_advisors = |doctoral_students = |notable_students = |known_for = ''The Human Group'', ''Social Behavior: Its Elementary Forms'', Exchange Theory |author_abbrev_bot = |author_abbrev_zoo = |influences = [[Robert K. Merton]], [[Talcott Parsons]], [[Lawrence J. Henderson]], [[Vilfredo Pareto]], [[B.F. Skinner]], [[Bernard DeVoto]], [[Émile Durkheim]], [[Elton Mayo]] |influenced = [[Charles Tilly]], Richard M. Emerson, [[Peter Blau]], [[James Samuel Coleman]], [[Edward Laumann]], Linda D. Molm, Karen S. Cook, Edward J. Lawler |awards = |signature = |footnotes = |ethnicity = |religion = }} '''George Caspar Homans''' (August 11, 1910 – May 29, 1989) was an American sociologist, founder of [[behavioral sociology]] and a major contributor to the [[social exchange theory]]. Homans is best known for his research in social behavior and his works: ''The Human Group'', ''Social Behavior: Its Elementary Forms'', his Exchange Theory and the many different propositions he made to better explain social behavior. == Biography == George C. Homans was a humanist and sociologist, some might say the last of a generation. Born in [[Boston]] on August 11, 1910, he grew up in a little house in Francis Avenue, Cambridge Massachusetts, son of Robert Homans and Abigail Adams-Homans (one can get complete sense of George C. Homans' upbringing by reading her biography ''Education by Uncles).'' Although he was one of sociology's greatest minds he had no graduate degrees in sociology or any other subject for that matter. Moreover, he was never properly trained because he believed that training was exclusively for dogs. Nevertheless, he educated himself by reading and listening to his peers and by conducting extensive "field work" in observing various social groups and became the president of the ''[[American Sociological Association]].'' He was the great-great grandson of [[John Quincy Adams]], the sixth President of the United States, and great-great-great grandson of [[John Adams]], the second President of the United States. At George's birth, his mother wrote to her Uncle Henry: 'His head is a mass of lumps which will make him look very distinguished when, as a bald old gentleman, he sits upon the bench dispensing justice.'"<ref name=":1">{{Cite journal|last=Bell|first=Daniel|author-link=Daniel Bell|year=1992|title=George C. Homans (11 August 1910-29 May 1989)|journal=[[Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society]]|publisher=[[American Philosophical Society]]|jstor=986764|volume=136|issue=4|pages=586–593|url= https://www.jstor.org/stable/986764}}</ref> George did not talk about the Adamses, yet had distinctively visible features in his skull that came from the Adamses. The Homanses, his father's family represented a different skein of public and service, the tradition of professions. For generations the family focused on two professions, Medical practice and Law. The Homans' came from a lineage of distinguished doctors that began when the first John Homans came to the country from Ramsgate, Kent, England in the 18th century. His son, Dr. John Homans, a Harvard University graduate, was the first to become a doctor and begin the reputation of the John Homanses (Homans 1984:1–2). "George's father was a lawyer, but George was the first member of the family to eschew the law".<ref name=":1" /> == Personal life == Homans attended [[St. Paul's School (New Hampshire)|St. Paul's School]] in [[Concord, New Hampshire]], from 1923 to 1928.<ref>[https://archive.today/wip/E6LOd "George Casper Homans."] ''Your Dictionary''. Archived from [https://biography.yourdictionary.com/george-caspar-homans the original.]</ref><ref>[http://www.sps70.org/AlumniHorae/15thAH.pdf "Corrections."] ''Alumni Horae'' ([[St. Paul's School (New Hampshire)|St. Paul’s School]]), vol. 65, no. 2 (1985): 94.</ref> From his [[autobiography]] (Homans 1984), it is learned that Homans entered [[Harvard College]] in 1928 with a concentration in [[English Literature|English]] and [[American literature]]. During his undergraduate years pursued poetry and had developed a grand ambition to become a writer and poet. George published his original works in ''[[The Harvard Advocate]],'' in which he was elected into the editorial board''.'' After graduating in 1932, Homans wanted to pursue a career as a newspaperman with a "job beginning in the fall with William Allen White of the Emporia, Kansas,''Gazette''," but because of the Depression the newspaper could no longer offer him the job, leaving Homans unemployed (Homans 1962:3). "In 1941, he married Nancy Parshall Cooper who remained his lifelong compatible partner".<ref name=":1" /> Homans served in the Naval Reserve (1941) he always had a love for the sea, as an undergraduate he assisted on helping Samuel Eliot Morrison in writing ''Massachusetts on the sea,'' so much so that Morrison named Homans co-author. George served four and a half years on active duty, serving five years in the navy in total, more than two were spent in command of several small ships engaged in anti submarine warfare and the escort of convoy operations (Homans 1962:50). Although he served for the duration of the war, in his autobiography ''Coming to my Senses: The Education of Sociologist'' (1984)'','' he later expressed his "impatience with the constraints of the naval hierarchy and his disdain for staff desk officers, especially those in bureaucratic branches such as the Supply Corps".<ref name=":1" /> == Education and Becoming a Sociologist == While Homans was at Harvard College, where he spent most of his time along the banks of Charles, in Harvard George met the person that directly influenced his life. Bernard ("Benny") de Voto, "a crusty man, cantankerous in his literary feuds whose name has been largely forgotten" was a part-time member of the Harvard Faculty and tutored Homans in English. "George ... was attracted to de Voto's stories about the plains and the prairies, but more, to the actuality of the lives of people and the American character as expressed in midwestern writing. In many ways, too, "George adopted the mannerisms of de Voto, the outwardly boisterous tones (but not for either the boosterist mentality) and the scorn of intellectualist rhetoric".<ref name=":1" /> Outwardly jaunty and self-assured, yet discreetly battling his own demons within his closed heart. He reserved all his pain and suffering for his poetry, which is seen in his book of poetry ''The Witch Hazel'' (1988). Homans became interested in sociology by living in an environment where people are highly conscious of social relations. Homans describes his entrance to sociology as "a matter of chance; or rather, I got into sociology because I had nothing better to do" (Homans 1962:3). [[Lawrence Joseph Henderson]], a biochemist and sociologist who believed that all sciences should be based on a unified set of theoretical and methodological principles, was an important influencer on Homans' perspective. Homans, with no job and nothing to do, attended Henderson's seminar at Harvard one day and was immediately taken by his lecture. Homans was also influenced by Professor Elton Mayo, where he was assigned to readings by prominent social anthropologists. From these readings, Homans developed his belief that instead of similarities in cultures, "members of the human species working in similar circumstances had independently created the similar institutions."<ref name=":3" /> As a result, Homans joined a discussion group at Harvard called the Pareto Circle, which was led by Henderson and inspired by the work of [[Vilfredo Pareto]]. Henderson often discussed Vilfredo Pareto in his lectures. Pareto was a sociologist concerned with economic distribution. Pareto's theories and Henderson's lectures influenced Homans' first book, ''An Introduction to Pareto'',<ref>Homans, George Caspar, and Charles P. Curtis, Jr. 1934. ''An Introduction to Pareto, His Sociology''. New York: Knopf.</ref> co-authored with fellow Circle member Charles P. Curtis. From 1934 to 1939 Homans was selected to become a part of the [[Harvard Society of Fellows|Society of Fellows]] a newly formed institution founded by A. Lawrence Lowell at Harvard, undertaking a variety of studies in various areas, including sociology, [[psychology]], and history. His comrades in the institution included, [[Willard Van Orman Quine|Van Quine]], [[Andrew M. Gleason|Andrew Gleason]] and [[B. F. Skinner|B.F. Skinner]] most of whom went on to become Harvard professors. In the institution the companions educated each other, George learned the most from his companion B.F. Skinner. Skinner taught Homans about the method of meticulous observation and the idea of reinforcement. "One can say that, in nunc, George Homans's sociology was a blend of Skinnerian reinforcement with utility theory." For his Junior Fellowship project Homans undertook an anthropological study of rural England, later published as ''English Villagers of the Thirteenth Century'' (1941) which he wrote instead of a Ph.D. that he never received. (see Homans 1984: 167). Homans was taken into the [[Graduate school|graduate program]] at Harvard; Pitirim Sorokin, founder of Harvard's sociology department in 1930, was credited with bringing Homans and Robert Merton into the program.<ref>Sica, Alan (2005). ''Social Thought From the Enlightenment to the Present'', Pennsylvania State University, 514.</ref> From this knowledge gained, "the key idea that Homans took away from these studies was the centrality of interaction and the way sentiments developed between individuals as a consequence on interaction."<ref name=":1" /> == Teaching == In 1939 Homans became a Harvard [[faculty (teaching staff)|faculty]] member, a lifelong affiliation in which he taught both sociology and [[medieval history]] "as well as studied poetry and small groups."<ref>Tilly, Charles (1990). "George Caspar Homans and the Rest of Us", Springer, 261–268.</ref> This teaching brought him in contact with new works in [[industrial sociology]] and exposed him to works of functional anthropologists. He was an instructor of sociology until 1941 when he left to serve in the [[United States Navy|U.S. Navy]] to support the war effort. After four years away, he came back to Boston and continued his teaching as an associate professor from 1946 to 1953, and a full professor of sociology after 1953. He was a [[Ford Foundation]] Fellow at Harvard's Graduate School of Business Administration.<ref name="George Homans 1989"/> He was also a visiting professor at the [[University of Manchester]] in 1953, at [[Cambridge University]] from 1955 to 1956, and at the [[University of Kent]] in 1967.<ref name="Treviño, A. Javier 2009">Treviño, A. Javier (2009).</ref> By virtue of his theoretical writings (discussed below), he was elected 54th president of the [[American Sociological Association]] in 1964. He retired from teaching in 1980.<ref name="George Homans 1989">[https://archive.today/ds4eU "George Homans, 78, Sociologist and Harvard Professor Emeritus"] ([[obituary]]). ''[[New York Times]]'' (May 30, 1989): sec. A, p. 20.</ref> ==Theoretical Agenda and General Argument== As a theorist, Homans' overall intellectual ambition was to create a more unified social science on a firm theoretical basis. His approach to theory developed in two phases, usually interpreted by commentators as [[inductive reasoning|inductive]] and [[Deductive reasoning|deductive]]. Although this is a bit of an oversimplification, it provides a framework for outlining his theoretical contributions. In its mature (1974) form, Homans' theory rests upon two metatheoretical claims: (1) the basic principles of social science must be true of individuals as members of the human species, not as members of particular groups or cultures; and (2) any other generalizations or facts about human social life will be derivable from these principles (and suitable initial conditions). He argued that large-scale structures can be understood if we understand elementary social behavior.<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> Another way to grasp his argument is to interpret it as striving to explain spontaneous social order, a point developed in detail by Fararo (2001). Homans' approach is an example of [[methodological individualism]] in social science, also favored by some more recent influential social theorists, particularly those who have adopted some form of rational choice theory (e.g., [[James Samuel Coleman|James S. Coleman]]) that enables greater deductive fertility in theorizing—albeit often with a cost in terms of some loss of [[wikt:realism|realism]]. ==''The Human Group''== Homans was impressed by Henderson's notion of a conceptual scheme. A conceptual scheme consists of a classification of variables (or concepts) that need to be taken into account when studying a set of phenomena.<ref name="Treviño, A. Javier 2009"/> It also consists of a sketch of the given conditions within which the phenomena are to be analyzed. It also must contain a statement that the variables are related to one another—and following Pareto, that relationship is usually seen as one of mutual dependence.<ref name="Treviño, A. Javier 2009"/> Homans was very interested in Henderson's conceptual scheme as a way of classifying phenomena and applied it to his own study of small groups. Henderson's teachings were included in Homans' work ''The Human Group'' (1950). This book's ultimate goal was to move from a study of the social system as it is exemplified in single groups toward a study of the system as it is exemplified in many groups, including groups changing in time.<ref name="Treviño, A. Javier 2009"/> The work has a theme of, "the way group norms develop and the ways a group, consciously or unconsciously, seeks to maintain the cohesion of the group when members depart from group norms."<ref name=":1" /> Homans establishes that, "the general propositions would have to meet only one condition: in accordance with my original insight, they should apply to individual human beings as members of a species."<ref name=":3" /> According to Homans the sociologists goal was to “move from a study of the social system as it is exemplified in single groups toward a study of the system as it is exemplified in many groups, including groups changing in time” (Homans 1949: 336). By the late 1950s Homans came slowly to the conclusion that human social systems were much less organic than what he had previously believed. Homans said, "If we wanted to establish the reality of a social system as a complex of mutually dependent elements, why not begin by studying a system small enough so that we could, so to speak, see all the way around it, small enough so that all the relevant observations could be made in detail and at first hand?" He fulfilled this study throughout ''The Human Group''. This book allowed him to make certain generalizations, including the idea that the more frequently people interact with one another, when no one individually initiates interactions more than others, the greater is their liking for one another and their feeling of ease in one another's presence. Although this wasn't Homans' greatest piece of work, it allowed him to become more familiar with this type of methodology and led him to explain elementary social behavior. In this work, Homans also proposes that social reality should be described at three levels: [[social event]]s, [[Norm (social)|customs]], and analytical [[hypothesis|hypotheses]] that describe the processes by which customs arise and are maintained or changed. Hypotheses are formulated in terms of relationships among variables such as frequency of interaction, similarity of activities, intensity of sentiment, and conformity to norms. Using notable sociological and [[anthropology|anthropological]] field studies as the grounding for such general ideas, the book makes a persuasive case for [[treating group]]s as social systems that can be analyzed in terms of a verbal [[analog (English)|analogue]] of the [[mathematical method]] of studying equilibrium and [[stability theory|stability]] of systems. In his theoretical analyses of these groups, he begins to use ideas that later loomed large in his work, e.g., reinforcement and exchange. Along the way, he treats important general [[phenomenon|phenomena]] such as [[social control]], [[authority]], [[Reciprocity (cultural anthropology)|reciprocity]], and [[ritual]]. ==The Exchange Theory== The Exchange Theory is the "perspective that individuals seek to maximize their own private gratifications. It assumes that these rewards can only be found in social interactions and thus people seek rewards in their interactions with each other".<ref>{{Cite book|title=Dictionary of Sociology: The Penguin Reference|last=Abercrombie|first=Nicholas|last2=Hill|first2=Stephen|last3=Turner|first3=Bryan|publisher=The Penguin Group|year=2006|isbn=978-0-14-101375-6|location=New York|pages=[https://archive.org/details/penguindictionar00aber_1/page/139 139–140]|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/penguindictionar00aber_1/page/139}}</ref> Homans' Exchange Theory propositions are partially based on B.F. Skinner's behaviorism. Homans took B.F. Skinner's propositions about pigeon behavior and applied it to human interactions.<ref name="George Ritzer 2008" /> The heart of Homans' Exchange Theory lies in propositions based on economic and psychological principles. According to Homans, they are psychological for two reasons: first, because they are usually tested on people who call themselves psychologists and second, because of the level at which they deal with the individual in society. He believed that a sociology built on his principles would be able to explain all social behavior. Homans said, "An incidental advantage of an exchange theory is that it might bring sociology closer to economics" (Homans 1958:598). Overall, Homans' exchange theory, "can be condensed to a view of the actor as a rational profit seeker."<ref name=":3">{{Cite book|title=Sociological Theory|last=Ritzer|first=George|publisher=McGraw-Hill|year=2014|isbn=978-0-07-802701-7|location=New York|pages=404–405, 412}}</ref> He regretted that his theory was labeled "Exchange Theory" because he saw this theory of social behavior as a behavioral psychology applied to specific situations.<ref name="George Ritzer 2008">George Ritzer (2008).</ref> Homans looked to Émile Durkheim's work for guidance as well, but often disagreed in the end with particular components of Durkheim's theories. For example, Durkheim believed that although individuals are the parts of society, society is more than the individuals who constitute it.<ref name="James Farganis 2008">James Farganis (2008)</ref> He believed that society could be studied without reducing it to individuals and their motivations.<ref name="James Farganis 2008"/> Homans, through his Exchange Theory, believed that individual beings and behavior are relevant to understanding society. ==Albert Chavannes and the Exchange Theory== Although George Homans contributed greatly to the Exchange Theory and his work on it is greatly admired, he was not the first person to study this theory. "From 1883 to 1885 Albert Chavannes published in ''The Sociologist'' a series of papers titled 'Studies in Sociology' which treated 'The Law of Exchange' and three other social laws."<ref>Knox, John B. (1963). "The Concept of Exchange in Sociological Theory: 1884 and 1961", ''Social Forces'', Oxford University Press, 341–346.</ref> Chavannes' work on the theory was similar to what Homans did. However, he focused more on empirical sociology, and he did not contribute to it in the same way as Homans (Knox 1963: 341). Although Homans may have not have been the first to work on this theory, his contributions make the Exchange Theory what it is today. ==''Social Behavior''== <!-- someone with access to the books needs to check the quotes below --> Homans's next major work was ''Social Behavior: Its Elementary Forms''. He wrote this book in 1961 and revised it in 1974. This was based on the principles of behavioral psychology, and helped explain the "sub-institutional," or elementary, forms of social behavior in small groups.<ref name="Treviño, A. Javier 2009"/> This explanation of social behavior first appeared in an article Homans published titled "Social Behavior as Exchange" in 1958. He believed his Exchange Theory was derived from both behavioral psychology and elementary economics.<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> Homans had come to the view that theory should be expressed as a [[deductive system]] (deductive reasoning, a researcher tests a theory by collecting and examining empirical evidence to see if the theory is true.), in this respect falling under the influence of the logical empiricist philosophers of that period. Substantively, he argued that a satisfactory explanation in the social sciences is based upon "propositions"—principles—about individual behavior that are drawn from the behavioral psychology of the time. Homans didn't believe that new propositions are needed to explain social behavior. The laws of individual behavior developed by Skinner in his study of pigeons explain social behavior as long as we take into account the complications of mutual reinforcement.<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> "Social Behavior is an exchange of goods, material goods, but also non-material ones, such as the symbols of approval or prestige. Persons that give much to others try to get much from them, and persons that get much from others are under pressure to give much to them." (Homans 1958:606). Social behavior as exchange means that a plurality of individuals, each postulated to behave according to the stated behavioral principles, form a system of interaction. [[Social approval]] is the basic reward that people can give to one another. In much greater detail, he developed this approach in his book ''Social Behavior: Its Elementary Forms'' (1961, revised 1974). Homans gives an example of this type of social behavior below: "Suppose that two men are doing paperwork jobs in an office. According to the office rules, each should do his job by himself, or, if he needs help, he should consult the supervisor. One of the men, whom we shall call Person, is not skillful at the work and would get it done better and faster if he got help from time to time. Despite the rules he is reluctant to go to the supervisor, for to confess his incompetence might hurt his chances for promotion. Instead he seeks out the other man, whom we shall call Other for short, and asks him for help. Other is more experienced at the work than is Person; he can do his work well and quickly and be left with time to spare, and he has reason to suppose that the supervisor will not go out of his way to look for a breach of rules. Other gives Person help and in return Person gives Other thanks and expressions of approval. The two men have exchanged help and approval." (Homans, 1961:31–32)<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> Focusing on this situation, and basing his ideas on Skinner's findings, Homans developed several propositions. ==The Success Proposition== "For all actions taken by persons, the more often a particular action of a person is rewarded, the more likely the person is to perform that action." (Homans, 1974:16)<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> In terms of his "Person-Other" example, this proposition means that a person is more likely to ask others for advice if past advice has been useful. Also, the more often a person received useful advice in the past, the more often they will request more advice and be willing to give advice. The success proposition involves three stages: (1) a person's action, (2) a rewarded result, and (3) a repetition of the original action.<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> ==The Stimulus Proposition== "If in the past the occurrence of a particular stimulus, or set of stimuli, has been the occasion on which a person's action has been rewarded, then the more similar the present stimuli are to the past ones, the more likely the person is to perform the action, or some similar action." (Homans, 1974:23)<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> One may look at Homans' example: If in the past, the Person and Other found the giving and getting of advice rewarding, they are likely to engage in similar actions and in similar situations in the future. Homans' example: "A fisherman who has cast his line into a dark pool and has caught a fish becomes more apt to fish in dark pools again" (1974:23). Homans was interested in the process of generalization, or the tendency to extend behavior to similar circumstances;<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> but he was also concerned with the process of discrimination. For example, Person and Other may only give useful advice in the same room as in the past because they think that particular situation brought the most success. ==The Value Proposition== "The more valuable to a person is the result of his action, the more likely he is to perform the action." (Homans, 1974:25)<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> If the rewards each offers to the other are considered valuable, the actors are more likely to perform the desired behaviors than they are if the rewards are not valuable. Homans introduced the concepts of rewards and punishments. Rewards are actions with positive values and punishments are actions with negative values. Rewards can either be materialistic (money) or altruistic (helping others) He found punishment to be an inefficient means of getting people to change their behavior, because people may react in undesirable ways to punishment.<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> ==The Deprivation-Satiation Proposition== "The more often in the recent past a person has received a particular reward, the less valuable any further unit of that reward becomes for him." (Homans, 1974:29)<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> In the office, Person and Other may reward each other so often for giving and getting advice that the rewards cease to be valuable to them. Time is important—people are less likely to become satiated if particular rewards are stretched over a long period of time. Homans then defined cost and profit. Cost of any behavior is defined as the rewards lost in forgoing alternative lines of action. Profit in [[Social exchange theory|social exchange]] is seen as the greater number of rewards gained over costs incurred.<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> ==The Aggression-Approval Propositions== "Proposition A: When a person's action does not receive the rewards as expected, or receives punishment he did not expect, he will be angry. He becomes more likely to perform aggressive {{sic|havior}}, and the results of such behavior become more valuable to him." (Homans, 1974:37) If Person does not get the advice they expected and Other does not receive the praise they anticipated, both are likely to be angry. "Proposition B: When a person's action receives the reward they expected, especially a greater reward than they expected, or does not receive punishment he expected, he will be pleased. He becomes more likely to perform approving behavior, and the results of such behavior become more valuable to him." (Homans, 1974:39) When Person gets the advice they expect, and Other gets the praise they expect, both are more likely to get or give advice. Proposition A on aggression-approval refers to negative emotions, whereas Proposition B deals with positive emotions.<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> ==The Rationality Proposition== "In choosing between alternative actions, a person will choose that one for which, as perceived by him at the time, the value, V, of the result, multiplied by the probability, p, of getting the result, is the greater." (Homans, 1974:43) When earlier propositions rely on behaviorism, the rationality proposition demonstrates the influence of rational choice theory on Homans' approach. In economic terms, actors who act in accord with the rationality proposition are maximizing their utilities.<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> People examine and make calculations about alternative actions open to them. They compare the amount of rewards associated with each course of action and calculate the likelihood that they will receive the rewards.<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> In other words, there is a relationship between the value of the reward and the likelihood of the attainment. The rationality proposition tells us that people will perform an action depending on their perception of the probability of success.<ref name="George Ritzer 2008"/> Durkheim agreed with Homans' understanding of rationality. He believed that rationalism is an aspect of individualism.<ref name="Robert Bellah 1973">Robert Bellah (1973).</ref> Durkheim said that all development of individualism has the effect of opening moral consciousness to new ideas and rendering it more demanding.<ref name="Robert Bellah 1973"/> Homans worked off of Durkheim's thoughts throughout the development of certain propositions. ==Legacy== He died of a heart ailment on May 29, 1989, in Cambridge, Massachusetts; at his death, he left behind his wife, Nancy, and three children as well as four grandchildren.<ref name="George Homans 1989" /> George C. Homans left to the sociological world many works on social theory, and is best known for his Exchange Theory and his works on social behavior. The impact he had on his students and colleagues and people he came in contact with is described by [[Charles Tilly]] in "George Caspar Homans and the Rest of Us": "His students inherited distrust of theory for its own sake and theories about theories. Even when they disagreed, his students and readers came away stimulated and refreshed. George was a vivifier, a life-giver" (Tilly, 1990:264). Also, Homans' election as the 54th president of the American Sociological Association (ASA) in 1964 allowed him to have a greater impact on sociology. In his Presidential address, entitled "Bringing Men Back In", was delivered at the ASA Annual Meeting in Montreal, September 2, 1964. This was later published in the December 1964 issue of the ''American Sociological Review.'' As Tilly also noted: "His differences made a difference to us, his colleagues, his friends, and successors. George was not, it is true, above rejoicing in his own talents, and thereby shaming or intimidating those about him" (Tilly, 1990:266). == Quotes by Homans == "''Sociology is the profession of studying and teaching about what happens when at least two persons are in a position to influence one another''" (Homans, 1962:103) "''Given the chance, I have always deserted anything that might have contemporary practical importance or that might lead to reforms. I have deserted the twentieth century for the thirteenth, social pathology for primitive kinship, industrial sociology for the study of small groups. It may have been mere escapism... My nerves may have been too weak for the modern world. What never failed to interest me was not sociology as an agent of change or as a means of understanding my immediate environment but sociology as a generalizing science. What were the best possibilities for establishing generalizations? What were the main intellectual issues? By what handle shall we lay hold on it? "''<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|year=1975|title=Conversation...with George C. Homans.|journal=Organizational Dynamics.|volume=4|issue=2}}</ref> "''As far as what good my work does people, I’m sorry to say that it does much more by way of alerting people to what may go wrong than it does in telling them what they can do about it.''"<ref name=":0" /> "''When you’re talking about reforming an industrial system, you have to talk about something that can be operated across the board. With much attention, very skilled people, small groups, reform always can be successful in some sense. But then people jump from this to something that’s going to operate across the board and reform the whole industrial system. They forget the Homans principle that no society, no governmental system, or no industrial system can work successfully if it depends on extraordinary abilities on the part of the people who run it. It has to be operable by ordinary damn fools like me.''"<ref name=":0" /> "''In human terms, it is hopeless. All of us believe in determinism at times—that is, experimentally believe in it. At other times, we believe we’re free. Our behavior is completely, but it doesn’t make damn bit of difference to me because I can’t predict it. I can’t show how the behavior of different men, behavior of exemplifying the same general propositions, combines over time to produce particular results. The trouble is that the past behavior that affects—determines if you will—present behavior is linked together in complex chains, creating the illusion of freedom.''"<ref name=":0" /> ''“It is really intolerable that we can say only one thing at a time; for social behavior displays many features at the same time, and so in taking them up one by one we necessarily do outrage to its rich, dark, organic unity.” (Homans, 1961)'' ''“The rule of distributive justice is a statement of what ought to be, and what people say ought to be is determined in the long run and with some lag by what they find in fact to be the case”. (Homans, 1974)'' ==Selected works== '''Articles''' * "The Small Warship." ''[[American Sociological Review]]'', vol. 11, no. 3 (1946): 294–300. {{doi|10.2307/2087113}}. {{JSTOR|2087113}}. * "Social Behavior as Exchange." ''[[American Journal of Sociology]]'', vol. 63, no. 6 (May 1958): 597–606. {{doi|10.1086/222355}}. {{JSTOR|2772990}}. '''Books''' * ''English Villagers of the Thirteenth Century '' (1941) * ''The Human Group'' (1950) * ''Social Behavior: Its Elementary Forms'' (1961) [rev. ed. 1974] * [[iarchive:natureofsocialsc00homa|''The Nature of Social Science'']] (1967) ::"The three chapters of this book were delivered, in earlier versions, as Walker-Ames Lectures at the University of Washington in the summer of 1965." * ''Coming to My Senses: The Autobiography of a Sociologist'' (1984) * ''Certainties and Doubts'' (1987) * ''Sentiments & Activities: Essays in Social Science'' (1962) ==Related Works or Commentaries== *Fararo, Thomas J. (2001). ''Social Action Systems: Foundation and Synthesis in Sociological Theory.'' Greenwich, CT: Praeger. *Turner, Jonathan H. (1998). "George C. Homans' Behavioristic Approach." Ch. 20. ''The Structure of Sociological Theory.'' 6th ed. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth. *Treviño, A. Javier. (2009). [http://www.infed.org/thinkers/george_homans.htm "George C. Homans, the human group and elementary social behaviour"], ''The Encyclopaedia of Informal Education''. *Treviño, A. Javier. (2006) ''George C. Homans: History, Theory, and Method''. Boulder, CO: Paradigm. * Ritzer, George. (2008) ''Sociological Theory.'' Ch. 12. "The Exchange Theory of George Homans" New York: [[McGraw-Hill]]. *Farganis, James. (2008). ''Readings in Social Theory: The Classic Tradition to Post-Modernism'' Chp. 2. "Emile Durkheim: Anomie and Social Integration." New York: [[McGraw-Hill]]. *Bellah, Robert N.(1973) "Emile Durkheim on Morality and Society." Introduction. [[University of Chicago Press]]. *Bloksberg, Leonard M., and David G. French, Melvin B. Mogulof, Walter F. Stern (1964).[http://www.bjpa.org/Publications/details.cfm?PublicationID=5390 "Homans' Theory of the Human Group: Applications to Problems of Administration, Policy, and Staff Training in Group Service Agencies."] ''Journal of Jewish Communal Service'', 379–395. National Conference of Jewish Communal Service. ==References== {{Reflist}} ==External links== {{Wikiquote}} * [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bXjU60a8dmI "Two Boston Brahmins"] (Summer 1985). The extended recording of Homans with Tom Adams in discussion for the sociological documentary ''[[American Tongues]]''. * {{Find a Grave}} {{American Sociological Association presidents|state=uncollapsed}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Homans, George C.}} [[Category:1910 births]] [[Category:1989 deaths]] [[Category:Harvard College alumni]] [[Category:American sociologists]] [[Category:Presidents of the American Sociological Association]] [[Category:Adams political family]] [[Category:Crowninshield family]]'
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'@@ -64,5 +64,5 @@ Homans was impressed by Henderson's notion of a conceptual scheme. A conceptual scheme consists of a classification of variables (or concepts) that need to be taken into account when studying a set of phenomena.<ref name="Treviño, A. Javier 2009"/> It also consists of a sketch of the given conditions within which the phenomena are to be analyzed. It also must contain a statement that the variables are related to one another—and following Pareto, that relationship is usually seen as one of mutual dependence.<ref name="Treviño, A. Javier 2009"/> -Homans was very interested in Henderson's conceptual scheme as a way of classifying phenomena and applied it to his own study of small groups. Henderson's teachings were included in Homans' work ''The Human Group'' (1950). This book's ultimate goal was to move from a study of the social system as it is exemplified in single groups toward a study of the system as it is exemplified in many groups, including groups changing in time.<ref name="Treviño, A. Javier 2009"/> The work has a theme of, "the way group norms develop and the ways a group, consciously or unconsciously, seeks to maintain the cohesion of the group when members depart from group norms."<ref name=":1" /> Homans establishes that, "the general propositions would have to meet only one condition: in accordance with my original insight, they should apply to individual human beings as members of a species."<ref name=":3" /> +Homans was very interested in Henderson's conceptual scheme as a way of classifying phenomena and applied it to his own study of small groups. Henderson's teachings were included in Homans' work ''The Human Group'' (1950). This book's ultimate goal was to move from a study of the social system as it is exemplified in single groups toward a study of the system as it is exemplified in many groups, including groups changing in time.<ref name="Treviño, A. Javier 2009"/> The work has a theme of, "the way group norms develop and the ways a group, consciously or unconsciously, seeks to maintain the cohesion of the group when members depart from group norms."<ref name=":1" /> Homans establishes that, "the general propositions would have to meet only one condition: in accordance with my original insight, they should apply to individual human beings as members of a species."<ref name=":3" /> According to Homans the sociologists goal was to “move from a study of the social system as it is exemplified in single groups toward a study of the system as it is exemplified in many groups, including groups changing in time” (Homans 1949: 336). By the late 1950s Homans came slowly to the conclusion that human social systems were much less organic than what he had previously believed. Homans said, "If we wanted to establish the reality of a social system as a complex of mutually dependent elements, why not begin by studying a system small enough so that we could, so to speak, see all the way around it, small enough so that all the relevant observations could be made in detail and at first hand?" He fulfilled this study throughout ''The Human Group''. This book allowed him to make certain generalizations, including the idea that the more frequently people interact with one another, when no one individually initiates interactions more than others, the greater is their liking for one another and their feeling of ease in one another's presence. Although this wasn't Homans' greatest piece of work, it allowed him to become more familiar with this type of methodology and led him to explain elementary social behavior. '
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[ 0 => 'Homans was very interested in Henderson's conceptual scheme as a way of classifying phenomena and applied it to his own study of small groups. Henderson's teachings were included in Homans' work ''The Human Group'' (1950). This book's ultimate goal was to move from a study of the social system as it is exemplified in single groups toward a study of the system as it is exemplified in many groups, including groups changing in time.<ref name="Treviño, A. Javier 2009"/> The work has a theme of, "the way group norms develop and the ways a group, consciously or unconsciously, seeks to maintain the cohesion of the group when members depart from group norms."<ref name=":1" /> Homans establishes that, "the general propositions would have to meet only one condition: in accordance with my original insight, they should apply to individual human beings as members of a species."<ref name=":3" /> According to Homans the sociologists goal was to “move from a study of the social system as it is exemplified in single groups toward a study of the system as it is exemplified in many groups, including groups changing in time” (Homans 1949: 336). By the late 1950s Homans came slowly to the conclusion that human social systems were much less organic than what he had previously believed.' ]
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[ 0 => 'Homans was very interested in Henderson's conceptual scheme as a way of classifying phenomena and applied it to his own study of small groups. Henderson's teachings were included in Homans' work ''The Human Group'' (1950). This book's ultimate goal was to move from a study of the social system as it is exemplified in single groups toward a study of the system as it is exemplified in many groups, including groups changing in time.<ref name="Treviño, A. Javier 2009"/> The work has a theme of, "the way group norms develop and the ways a group, consciously or unconsciously, seeks to maintain the cohesion of the group when members depart from group norms."<ref name=":1" /> Homans establishes that, "the general propositions would have to meet only one condition: in accordance with my original insight, they should apply to individual human beings as members of a species."<ref name=":3" />' ]
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